Marriage, cohabitation + divorce Flashcards
1
Q
What was marriage traditionally
A
Monogomous and for life
2
Q
What has UK society now moved towards
A
Serial monogamy
3
Q
What has secularisation meant for marriage
A
Before the 1970s, most weddings were religious ceremonies in a church, but these were a minority in 2012
4
Q
Trends in marriage
A
- Marriage rates peaked in 1940 but have been reducing since 1970
- Entry into marriage has been postponed to later ages among recent generations
- An increasing proportion of marriages are now remarriages
5
Q
What is cohabitation
A
Living together outside of marriage. This includes civil partnerships
6
Q
How was cohabitation viewed in the past
A
It existed in the past but was viewed as immoral and sinful
7
Q
Trends in cohabitation
A
- 80% of couples who cohabit go on to marry
- Couples cohabit 4 years on average before marriage
- The number of people aged 16 and over who cohabit has risen since 1990
- Childbearing while cohabiting has increased
- Cohabitation is the fastest growing UK family type
8
Q
Cohabitation studies
A
- Cohabitation before marriage makes it less likely to end in divorce (Beaujouan and Ní Brochlain 2011)
- For poorer couples, cohabitation is a way of living which reflects economic uncertainity
- Young couples with low-paid jobs may choose to cohabit as it allows them to leave their parents home and share household expenses
- There has also been an increase in those 65+ who cohabit
9
Q
Four main reasons for the rise in cohabitation
A
- changing social attitudes - people were expected to marry before living together
- The decline in family values - families are no longer expected to conform to the traditional nuclear family ideal
- Individualisation - Beck and Beck-Gernsheim say people now put their own needs first
- The changing role of women - Up until the 1980s marriage and childrearing were considered the main roles of women
10
Q
Why divorce is rising
A
- The privatised nuclear family - Isolation from extended kin means less pressure to stay together
- Changing social attitudes - A decline in religion led to divorce being seen as a necessary evil
- Changing roles for women - women are more likely to initiate divorce as they are no longer financially dependant on their husbands
- Higher expectations of marriage - Partners will no longer tolerate an abusive marriage
- Individualisation and reflexivity - People are now more self-oriented